The “slave” era. Frustrated with Warner Bros., Prince began flooding the zone. Lovesexy (1988) was a single-track CD spiritual rebirth—too weird for the charts. Batman (1989) was contractually obliged pop craft, but “Batdance” is brilliantly chaotic. The early 90s saw him form the New Power Generation, leaning into hip-hop and house: Diamonds and Pearls (1991) had “Cream” and “Gett Off”—the latter a porn-funk masterpiece.

Then he swerved. Around the World in a Day (1985) rejected global superstardom for psychedelic paisley pop. Parade (1986) was Euro-funk surrealism (“Kiss” as minimalism perfected). Then came Sign o’ the Times (1987)—his double album masterpiece . A document of AIDS, crack epidemics, Reaganomics, and spiritual yearning. “If I Was Your Girlfriend” bends gender and desire into a Mobius strip. The title track is coldwave funk journalism. This is Prince at his most complete: producer, poet, and prophet. Lovesexy, Batman, Graffiti Bridge, Diamonds and Pearls, The Love Symbol Album, Come, The Gold Experience, Chaos and Disorder prince discography

He didn’t just leave a catalog. He left a system . And we’re still decoding it. The “slave” era

Then he changed his name to an unpronounceable symbol. The Love Symbol Album (1992) contains “7,” a psychedelic folk-apocalypse. The Gold Experience (1995) is his post-Warner rebuttal: “The Most Beautiful Girl in the World” is lush, but “Endorphinmachine” is primal scream rock. He wrote “slave” on his cheek. The discography becomes a labyrinth—bloated, brilliant, defiant. Emancipation, Crystal Ball, The Rainbow Children, Musicology, 3121, Planet Earth, Lotusflow3r, 20Ten, Plectrumelectrum, Art Official Age, HITnRUN Phase One & Two Batman (1989) was contractually obliged pop craft, but

Controversy (1981) doubled down: the title track’s robotic chant (“Am I black or white? / Am I straight or gay?”) over a stabbing synth bassline was radical. This era’s through-line: . Era Two: The Imperial Phase (1982–1987) 1999, Purple Rain, Around the World in a Day, Parade, Sign o’ the Times

To understand Prince’s work is to abandon the idea of “hits” as the main event. Instead, we track four distinct eras—each with its own cosmology. For You, Prince, Dirty Mind, Controversy

Before 1999 and Purple Rain , Prince was already a singularity. For You (1978) is a teenage savant playing all 27 instruments —a flex disguised as a debut. But Dirty Mind (1980) is the real ground zero. Recorded on a minimal budget in his home studio, it fused new wave synths, punk aggression, and funk’s pelvic swagger. Tracks like “When You Were Mine” and “Uptown” rewrote pop’s DNA, presenting a bisexual, multiracial, post-genre protagonist.